How to choose the right mattress for your needs:

Have you wondered what the decisive elements in choosing a
mattress are? Here are the features and qualities that must be considered when
choosing the best mattress type and model in relation to your personal needs.

The comfort of a
mattress:

Like most people who are asked “what is the decisive
element, which is the most important element in choosing the best
mattress”, you probably would answer that it is its comfort.

But what is ‘comfort’, and what should we consider to find a
comfortable mattress, one that can best meet the needs of each of us?

Being linked to the characteristics of individual people,
such as their body weight, the position in which they sleep, their age, their
particular needs and more, the comfort of a mattress largely depends on the
subjective characteristics of the user.

But it also depends on objective factors related to the
mattress itself, which can increase or decrease its comfort.

The very fact that we cannot give clear, unambiguous answers
to this question, valid for everyone, often makes it difficult to find the most
comfortable mattress, the one that best fits the personal needs or needs of
each of us.

Below we will try to summarize what are the main factors to
consider when choosing a mattress.

We will first examine the objective factors related to the
different types of mattresses: those, in memory foam that is the most modern;
to the more traditional sprung ones; to those in latex, to an inflatable or
water mattresses, to those in polyurethane.

The possible choice of
memory foam mattress:

The memory foam (in combination with a base of the same
polyurethane mattress) provides the mattress with an excellent body wrapping
capacity.

It is also able to dampen the propagation of oscillations in
the mattress, which is particularly convenient for those who share a double
mattress with their partner.

Their density. When we speak of “density of memory
foam”, we refer to its weight per cubic meter.

A higher density of the memory layer normally implies, from a
practical point of view, a greater level of comfort (and a cost) than the
mattress.